The way we experience time in our minds it’s never going to match up with the latest discoveries in physics: if I’m having fun, time flies. If I’m watching water boiling, time goes way too slowly. However much you learn about four-dimensional space-time, waiting for that delayed train is still going to feel longer than having lunch with your friend. There are many moments in which we can feel time with our body and mind. A perception not subjected to physics laws but to states of mind and the emotional spheres of ourselves. Sometimes we feel like the moment we are living will never end: an unpleasant situation, discomfort or boredom seems to be endless, as negative state of mind come into play by dilating temporal perception. On the contrary, in situations of happiness, euphoria or serenity, time seems to fly. Slowing as sand within fingers, and one hour is like five minutes. Let's think for a moment what the world would be like if our clocks no longer followed the ticking hours, minutes and seconds but rather what we perceive when we look at the world. What would it be like to live lost in time? Without a concept tied to the past, present and future? What would the world be like if the clock was just an organic flow of perceptions? The purpose of the project is to examine how emotional-visual content, can orchestrate temporal perception to such an extent that we lose ourselves in it.